2. Uh, no, again. The idea of paid protesters was rather handily debunked by Snopes, and PolitiFact.

3. Short of yelling “fire” in a crowded theater, pretty much anything said by the cast of Hamilton is protected by the First Amendment.

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Things are about to get grim as the country prepares for a leader who has said — on record — that the First Amendment provides too much freedom of speech. In Trump’s world, protesters should be beaten up. So it makes sense that a gathering billed as a "million-woman march," it's official name is the Women's March on Washington, is quickly gathering steam. The Some 100,000 people have said on Facebook they plan to attend.

Obviously, the numbers could be lower (it’s easy to hit “like” or “interested” on social media), but in states like Connecticut, buses are being added to accommodate the attendees who want to travel to D.C. over Inauguration weekend.

This is not the first presidential inauguration that’s drawn protesters. Pretty much any inauguration has had its dissenters, though some more than others. If you look at old pictures from 1981, you’ll see me waving from President Ronald Reagan’s swearing-in. We were a small group.

This inauguration is different. This feels massive and — to use a word that’s quickly becoming hackneyed — unprecedented, though the response makes sense. A combative campaigner should expect combative protests.

Add to the list of people who are on guard about a Trump administration women, people of color, Muslims, people who live with disabilities, and others.

The New York Times keeps a running list — 289 at last count — of the people, places, and things whom Trump has insulted over his campaign and transition. Check out the insults he reserves for women.

So for as long as the National Park Service has to hold space, there will still be hundreds of thousands of women and their supporters coming to the capital city in January. Mr. Trump, consider yourself put on notice.

And welcome to your next four years.

Campbell is a journalist, author and distinguished lecturer in journalism at the University of New Haven. She is the author of Dating Jesus: Fundamentalism, Feminism and the American Girl and the upcoming Searching for The American Dream in Frog Hollow. Her work has appeared in the Hartford Courant, Connecticut Magazine, The New Haven Register and The Guardian. Follow her @campbellsl

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